Blum mentions DIA’s Directorate for
Management and Operations as being the main office
involved. He also claims they have a Project
Aquarius. (p.33)

Blum says he phoned the DIA office in the
Pentagon and talked to Phillips. (p.50)

Blum states that the FBI went to the DIA
headquarters in Pentagon room 3E258 to ask
questions about the leaked 1987 Top-secret MJ-12
document. (p.209)

Blum states that Col. Harold E. Phillips, (Col.
John Alexander) U.S. Army was transferred to the
DIA in June 1985. Blum states that he entered the
Army as first Lieutenant, has a graduate degree in
electrical engineering.

In 1986 Blum claims that Phillips became
"Associate Coordinator of Space
Reconnaissance Activities, " inside the DIA.
This made him an assistant to the DIA’s
representative to the National Foreign
Intelligence Board’s Committee on Imagery
requirements and Exploitation (COMIREX) – one of
the most sensitive and powerful jobs in the
intelligence community.

DIA is persuaded to convene a top-secret
working group to investigate UFOs (40)

Mentions arrivals at the Pentagon DIA
Directorate for Management and Operations by
various high-level scientists and intelligence
people invited for the first meeting of the UFO
Working Group. (p.41)

DIA – UFO Links

Blum mentions that in the fall of 1983
researcher Bill Moore got a call telling him that
Korean Flight 007 "had been shot down over
the Soviet Union – before the story hit the
press." (p.237) The agency in change of the
investigation of the Korean incident was DIA. At
the point hours before the story had hit the
press, it would be safe to assume the only people
who would know would be people at DIA
headquarters.

Bill Moore produced a flow chart showing the
hierarchy of government agencies involved in the
UFO cover-up. This chart was composed based on
information he had discovered from people on
"the inside." The DIA is given a key
role in the chart.

It is generally believed that Bill Moore’s
top contact Falcon who was the main source of most
of the material he received was with the DIA. The
Blum encounter with the DIA UFO Working Group
oddly occurs at the same time as the two-hour UFO
Cover-up Live documentary which was filmed in
Washington DC, home of DIA headquarters. All
evidence pointed to Falcon as the initiator of the
UFO documentary and source of much

of the information used on the show.

In Phil Klass’s January 8, 1988 phone
interview with Richard Doty, Doty made a
statement, which also pointed to the Falcon as
being in Washington. Doty told Klass that he had
retained a lawyer to "take action"
concerning the story he had leaked the document.
He then claimed that Moore had named the man he
had gotten the documents from. (MJ-12)

"He gave the person’s name in the
affidavit that he received the documents from,
and this person – I don’t know him –
this person in Washington D.C. My attorney
went to Washington D.C. and spoke to this
person and he denied ever giving Bill Moore
anything although he said that he had regular
contact with Bill Moore.

More importantly, in the same interview
Doty states that the FBI investigated the MJ-12
document and interviewed the same person in
Washington about the document. In a question from
Klass as to who produced the documents Doty
stated,

"Well, the FBI knows that. The FBI
knows who did it. That information was
provided to the FBI. The FBI interviewed this
person and of course this person denied that
he gave them to Moore . . The FBI never
pursued it, I don’t know why, unless they
couldn’t. I don’t know if there was any
law that this person broke. I don’t know if
it is public record or not, but you’ll have
to go to the FBI to find out. But I know for a
fact they interviewed him – this person in
Washington, D.C."

Now Blum, in his book "Out There"
tells a story that closely matches what Doty told
Klass about going to Washington to interview
people about the MJ-12 document.

The two foreign counterintelligence FBI agents,
according to Blum, go to room 3E258 in the
Pentagon. This is the office of the Director of
the Defense Intelligence Agency, as they had
learned the DIA was "covertly investigating
UFOs." They were there asking for help in
their investigation of the MJ-12 document. Blum
writes,

"It was the FBI’s undisputed
responsibility to investigate thefts of
classified documents. And that was why, I
finally learned, the two agents had come to
the DIA looking for guidance. They were trying
to determine whether an incredible UFO
document had been stolen from the government
of the United States. And, more perplexing,
whether the document was genuine."

Blum even states that the UFO Working group
discussed the document, and that Colonel Phillips
confirmed the fact that the FBI was asking
questions about the legitimacy of the MJ-12
document, as if he had been interviewed.

The FBI did investigate the MJ-12 document. In
the 22 pages that make up FBI file 65-81170 they
refer to an investigation by INTD, Section
CI-2." A note made related to A COPY OF THE
MJ-12 document, which appeared in Dallas stated,
"attempt should be made to determine any DOD
interest in the enclosed document." There is
no record of any visit to DIA headquarters at the
Pentagon in the fall of 1988, and all the FBI
documents are dated in 1991 almost 4 years after
the document was first made public.

The DIA Falcon Link

If Doty’s story about Moore identifying the
man behind the MJ-12 documents to the FBI is true,
the trip of the counterintelligence agents to the
DIA Headquarters in the Pentagon, mentioned by
Blum, indicates the man Moore identified was in
that office. As Coleman said knew him and that he
had a definite need to know, all point to one of
the upper echelon persons in DIA headquarters in
1988 when the FBI made their trip.

Bill Coleman told Billy Cox that Falcon, who
was in the audience at "UFO Cover-up . .
.Live" was definitely with "the
agency" and that he had "need-to-know
security credentials." Cox stated,

"Coleman said he was totally surprised
by the Falcon’s testimony, and didn’t know
what to make of it. But Coleman was an Air
Force censor and knows a lot more than he lets
on. But he tends to be skeptical about
government cover-up stories, or at least that’s
the face he wears around me. Anyway, he said
that the show had gotten his curiosity ignited
and he was going to make a concerted effort to
"get to the bottom" of the Roswell
thing. Unless, of course, the government
decided that his curiosity wasn’t in the
best interests of national security, in which
case he would get a debriefing. I said, ‘Bill,
if that happens, will you at least let me know
about it?’ Coleman says, ‘No.’"

Doty was not with an "agency" and
Coleman would be more likely to know people in the
DIA than the CIA.

In Phil Klass’s January 8, 1988 phone
interview with Richard Doty, Doty made a
statement, which also pointed to the Falcon as
being in Washington. Doty told Klass that he had
retained a lawyer to "take action"
concerning the story he had leaked the document.
He then claimed that Moore had named the man he
had gotten the documents from. (MJ-12)

"He gave the person’s name in the
affidavit that he received the documents from,
and this person – I don’t know him –
this person in Washington D.C. My attorney
went to Washington D.C. and spoke to this
person and he denied ever giving Bill Moore
anything although he said that he had regular
contact with Bill Moore.

More importantly, in the same interview
Doty states that the FBI investigated the MJ-12
document and interviewed the same person in
Washington about the document. In a question from
Klass as to who produced the documents Doty
stated,

"Well, the FBI knows that. The FBI
knows who did it. That information was
provided to the FBI. The FBI interviewed this
person and of course this person denied that
he gave them to Moore . . The FBI never
pursued it, I don’t know why, unless they
couldn’t. I don’t know if there was any
law that this person broke. I don’t know if
it is public record or not, but you’ll have
to go to the FBI to find out. But I know for a
fact they interviewed him – this person in
Washington, D.C."

Now Blum, in his book "Out There"
tells a story that closely matches what Doty told
Klass about going to Washington to interview
people about the MJ-12 document.

The two foreign counterintelligence FBI agents,
according to Blum, go to room 3E258 in the
Pentagon. This is the office of the Director of
the Defense Intelligence Agency, as they had
learned the DIA was "covertly investigating
UFOs." They were there asking for help in
their investigation of the MJ-12 document. Blum
writes,

"It was the FBI’s undisputed
responsibility to investigate thefts of
classified documents. And that was why, I
finally learned, the two agents had come to
the DIA looking for guidance. They were trying
to determine whether an incredible UFO
document had been stolen from the government
of the United States. And, more perplexing,
whether the document was genuine."

Blum even states that the UFO Working group
discussed the document, and that Colonel Phillips
confirmed the fact that the FBI was asking
questions about the legitimacy of the MJ-12
document, as if he had been interviewed.

The FBI did investigate the MJ-12 document. In
the 22 pages that make up FBI file 65-81170 they
refer to an investigation by INTD, Section
CI-2." A note made related to A COPY OF THE
MJ-12 document, which appeared in Dallas stated,
"attempt should be made to determine any DOD
interest in the enclosed document." There is
no record of any visit to DIA headquarters at the
Pentagon in the fall of 1988, and all the FBI
documents are dated in 1991 almost 4 years after
the document was first made public.

The DIA Falcon Link

If Doty’s story about Moore identifying the
man behind the MJ-12 documents to the FBI is true,
the trip of the counterintelligence agents to the
DIA Headquarters in the Pentagon, mentioned by
Blum, indicates the man Moore identified was in
that office. As Coleman said knew him and that he
had a definite need to know, all point to one of
the upper echelon persons in DIA headquarters in
1988 when the FBI made their trip.

Bill Coleman told Billy Cox that Falcon, who
was in the audience at "UFO Cover-up . .
.Live" was definitely with "the
agency" and that he had "need-to-know
security credentials." Cox stated,

"Coleman said he was totally surprised
by the Falcon’s testimony, and didn’t know
what to make of it. But Coleman was an Air
Force censor and knows a lot more than he lets
on. But he tends to be skeptical about
government cover-up stories, or at least that’s
the face he wears around me. Anyway, he said
that the show had gotten his curiosity ignited
and he was going to make a concerted effort to
"get to the bottom" of the Roswell
thing. Unless, of course, the government
decided that his curiosity wasn’t in the
best interests of national security, in which
case he would get a debriefing. I said, ‘Bill,
if that happens, will you at least let me know
about it?’ Coleman says, ‘No.’"

Doty was not with an "agency" and
Coleman would be more likely to know people in the
DIA than the CIA.